Chevrolet has a long history of hiding serious performance in everyday sheetmetal, and one of the strangest examples is a Super Sport wagon that actually existed, then slipped out of the spotlight.
Before the 1968 Chevrolet SS 427 ever rumbled onto American streets, it was already something of an oddity—a secret muscle car hidden inside a full-size suit. Produced only from 1967 to 1969 as the ...
Across eighteen model years, from 1962 to 1979, Chevrolet built 4,698,781 Novas, a number so massive it cemented the nameplate as one of the most successful compacts in American automotive history.
A factory L79-powered 1966 Chevy II Nova SS with documented history, numbers-matching drivetrain, and a concours rotisserie ...
First introduced in September of 1963, the Chevelle nameplate was Chevy’s answer to the growing demand for midsize models, offering everything from sensible family sedans to performance-oriented ...
Our feature face-off this week involves a slick 1963 Chevy Impala SS convertible and a bright-red 1967 Pontiac GTO convertible. Let’s cover some history before we take a look at our competitors. The ...
Oakland County — The last Chevy SS (Super Sport) I drove in 2016 was a stealthy muscle car. Modest looks, sedan shape, growling V-8 under the hood waiting to be unleashed on unsuspecting Bimmers. SS ...